The unvirtuous cycle of discrimination affecting people with hepatitis B: a multi-country qualitative assessment of key-informant perspectives

Background An estimated 296 million individuals live with chronic hepatitis B worldwide, most have not been diagnosed and remain at risk of liver disease and cancer. People with hepatitis B often face discrimination that denies them employment or education opportunities, results in unfair treatment at work or in school, limits their ability to emigrate to certain countries, and in some cases prohibits them from serving in the military. Discrimination specific to hepatitis B has not been widely documented within the literature. This study aims to investigate and describe hepatitis B related discrimination, document discrimination occurring around the globe, and provide initial recommendations for addressing discrimination using key informant interviews. Methods Purposive and snowball sampling were used to identify potential key informants for qualitative interview. Key informants identified as community health leaders, public health scientists, doctors, and researchers, many of whom were also living with hepatitis B. Using a semi-structured guide, participants were asked to describe their experience and any challenges for people living with hepatitis B including marginalization and its’ consequences. A codebook was used to guide the organization of data for analysis, and all transcripts N = 17 were double coded. Results The overarching themes identified from interviews demonstrate explicit experiences with discrimination of those directly affected, the psychological responses, and the negative health outcomes associated with the unvirtuous cycle of discrimination. All key informants reported on the substantial quality of life implications and often poorer health outcomes resulting from hepatitis B discrimination. Participants also identified the significant impact of hepatitis B discrimination occurring within a range of education-based services across several countries as well as military exclusion or removal if individuals are found to have hepatitis B. Conclusion Our data demonstrate that hepatitis B discrimination has a significant impact. Discrimination can occur at various points in life from education, to seeking employment, to marriage, to restrictions on entry, travel and stay in other countries. This study demonstrates the impact of discrimination and the need for future research that can lead to policy change and protections for people living with and impacted by hepatitis B.

820,000 deaths worldwide attributed to chronic hepatitis B, mostly from cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC, primary liver cancer) [1]. An estimated 296 million individuals live with chronic hepatitis B worldwide, most of whom have not been diagnosed and remain at risk of liver disease, including cancer [1,2]. Clinical management, including regular monitoring and pharmaceutical treatment effectively reduces the risk of mortality resulting from the infection [3]. While most people are unaware of their hepatitis B infection, those that have been diagnosed often face significant social marginalization from stigma and discrimination as a result of their hepatitis B infection [1,[4][5][6]. People with hepatitis B often experience disease-related stigma [6,7]. Stigma has been defined as a social process, experienced or anticipated, and which is characterized by exclusion, rejection, blame or devaluation resulting from experience, perception or reasonable anticipation of an adverse social judgement about a person or a group [8]. Stigma resulting from hepatitis B infection has contributed to discrimination, a reduction in quality of life, and difficulty accessing employment, education and immigration [7]. Within academic literature, limited research is available specifically describing hepatitis B related stigma [7] and the consequences of stigma, including discrimination.
People with hepatitis B often face discrimination that denies them employment or education opportunities, results in unfair treatment at work or in school, limits their ability to emigrate to certain countries, and in some cases prohibits them from serving in the military. Most research about discrimination has been conducted in China, or with people of Chinese ethnicity living in other countries. In 2010, China outlawed a requirement for hepatitis B testing for school admissions and employment applications [9,10]. Despite this, the U.S. State Department's 2015 human rights report noted that testing for hepatitis B remains common practice in employment screening in China [11]. It has been documented that people who test positive for hepatitis B are not hired and provided a reason other than their positive status [12]. There appears to be limited awareness of the anti-discrimination laws and workers' rights in China as well as limited laws available to respond to hepatitis B specific discrimination [10]. Despite legal prohibitions in place in China, a survey done in Beijing, China in 2015 showed that 40% of participants with hepatitis B were required to undergo pre-employment testing, with 29% believing they lost employment opportunities due to their infection [13]. In the U.S., discrimination is experienced by healthcare students, causing denial of school admission or enrollment, restriction of clinical training or dismissal from an academic program [14].
While hepatitis B discrimination has largely been reported anecdotally within a global context, this study aims to investigate and describe hepatitis B related discrimination, document discrimination occurring around the globe, and provide initial recommendations for addressing discrimination using key informant interviews. For the purposes of this study, discrimination is described by modifying the HIV-specific discrimination definitions within the United Nations [15], and where discrimination specific to hepatitis B is defined as the unjust, unfair, or prejudicial treatment of a person on the grounds of their hepatitis B status. In other words, being treated differently from others in the community because of being infected with hepatitis B.

Data collection
Purposive and snowball sampling were used to identify potential key informants to interview. First, individuals were classified as key informants by investigators as being community health leaders, public health scientists (N = 3), doctors (N = 3), researchers (N = 1) and patient advocates (N = 17), many of whom were also living with hepatitis B (N = 8) and actively work in hepatitis B in their respective communities (N = 16). All were over 18 years old. All key informants could speak to hepatitis B-specific challenges related to discrimination from their professional research, personal, or community-based organization experiences most participants had lived experience related to hepatitis B and are known within the viral hepatitis community as champions and key leaders. Several participants started their own community-based organizations to help others after experiencing a personal diagnosis with hepatitis B (N = 8) and actively work on addressing community health needs in their respective communities (N = 17). Participants were approached via email by study staff (CF and LM), informed of the study goals and were requested an interview using the zoom platform. In total, 34 people were emailed with an interview request, some individuals did not agree to participate due to not having enough information to contribute (N = 3), their role being clinically focused (N = 2), while some were unreachable (N = 12).
Once an interview was scheduled by study staff (LM) the interviews were conducted by two trained facilitators (CF and LM) using a structured interview guide and using the Zoom platform. The structured interview guide was designed using literature on discrimination from other disease states, followed by expert review (Appendix). Participants were first asked to describe their work or experience as it relates to hepatitis B, describe challenges for people living with hepatitis B including marginalization in the communities the participant serves, if, why and how people with hepatitis B are marginalized, its' consequences, and recommendations to addressing this marginalization.
At the end of each interview, participants were asked if there were other people we should speak to who had working knowledge of hepatitis B-specific discrimination or could speak to personal experiences with discrimination. Interviews took place between January 2021 to May 2021 and lasted 25 to 70 min in length. Each interview was conducted in the English language, electronically recorded and transcribed verbatim. Interviews were performed by study staff until saturation was reached and no new details were emerging from interviews related to hepatitis B discrimination.

Data analysis
A directed content analysis approach was used to create the codebook and guide the organization of data. Codes were developed by review of the literature (a priori) and through line-by-line reading of a subsample of queries [16]. Each code was given a specific definition to ensure coding accuracy and to improve intercoder reliability [17]. The codebook is provided as Fig. 1 and includes the themes and their frequencies of reference throughout the data analysis and coding process. All data transcripts (N = 17) were independently double coded by two members of the research team (LM, VW) to ensure coding accuracy. Inter-coder reliability (ICR) was assessed to identify coding discrepancies, and the analysis team met throughout the coding process to discuss and resolve discrepancies in coding. A kappa score of 0.80 or greater was considered good coding agreement. After coding was complete, the team reviewed the coding and organized findings into thematic categories. Data analysis used Nvivo version 12 (QRS International, Doncaster, Australia), a software program that facilitates organization of qualitative data. This study was approved by the Heartland Institutional Review Board with verbal consent obtained and recorded by all study participants prior to each interview. This study was performed in accordance with the ethical standards in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments and comparable ethical standards.

Results
Most study participants lived in hepatitis B endemic regions including Ethiopia, Nigeria (N = 2), Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, Philippines (N = 2), Kiribati, China (N = 2), Mongolia, India, Turkey, and non-endemic regions including Australia, and the United States. Several overarching themes emerged related to experiences associated with discrimination and are depicted in Fig. 1. The themes demonstrate specific experiences with discrimination, the psychological response, and the health outcomes associated with an unvirtuous cycle that impacts people's lives in various ways at various points in their life. Below we describe each element of the discrimination cycle: the causes or influences of discrimination, the experience and context of discrimination, and the outcomes of discrimination represented by quotes from all key informants. Strategies for addressing discrimination from the perspective of key informants is also included as recommendations towards addressing discrimination.

Exposure to discrimination: psychological impact
All key informants reported on the substantial quality of life implications and often poorer health outcomes resulting from hepatitis B discrimination. For some, these  This study found psychological responses to discrimination including trauma, suicide, mental health challenges, depression, economic instability, and social isolation. One participant shared the broader impact of hepatitis B discrimination stating, "[they] find out that they have hepatitis, so the problem now is since for example, you studied up to college and you are now to go to work and help your family then suddenly you are being denied [employment] not even once but twice or thrice so it really demoralizing. " Another participant explained challenges for women in relation to childbearing. In most countries it is recommended that women are mandatorily tested for hepatitis B during pregnancy to reduce hepatitis B mother to child transmission during delivery. The psychological and practical impact of this diagnosis on women can be substantial in a context where clinical guidelines are not followed: "You hear people being forced to abort child, because during their pregnancy, there were found to be positive…these women and sometimes even by their own families they're disowned. " Hepatitis B-related discrimination was identified to affect people with hepatitis B from a very young age: "Even parents don't like to send their children to school because again they believe the child is infected and that they might not even live long. " The impact of the social marginalization of people with hepatitis B was seen to cause significant mental health challenges, with one participant describing that, "Because people are discriminating against them so some people can even kill, or [commit] suicide", while another noted that people with hepatitis B "definitely feel very lonely because they got disease and they get rejected by their beloved, and their friends, and colleagues. "

Exposure to discrimination: individual impact Stigma
Stigma, both self-stigma or stigma internalized by people as a result of external or public stigma, and public or external social stigma [18] were described as key factors contributing to discrimination.
Many of the informants, particularly those with hepatitis B described some of the social contexts that affected them daily. One key informant noted, "One battle is inside the body that we are facing every day that effect[s] mental health or physical health and in society, we face discrimination, and you know disrespectful manners, we face stigma about the disease. For a hepatitis B positive patient, it's very difficult to survive in this world. " Another person with hepatitis B noted that people with hepatitis B were deeply affected by concerns related to transmission "people feel so much guilt about potentially transmitting the virus to your loved ones. " It was described how misunderstandings about the infection affect people's lives in many ways, including their intimate, romantic and familial relationships. One informant shared, '[people think] hepatitis is always a terminal illness, you will not live long so that is a barrier to most couples even getting married. They just feel people should not get involved with people like that. " Other's report being stigmatized because of their hepatitis B, one individual explained, "when I go for a lecture in the community to educate about hepatitis B, most of the time I faced discrimination that people fear to touch and they hesitate to again, like [to have] lunch together or they hesitate to handshake. " Overall, a variety of factors including common misconceptions, lack of knowledge about transmission and low awareness specific to hepatitis B contribute to stigma that in turn can progress towards discrimination.

Lack of awareness
Overall lack of awareness of hepatitis B among the public is a significant contributor to discrimination according to several key informants. One participant shared, "For me, I think the reason why hepatitis B patients are discriminated is because those who discriminate them in the first place, are not informed about hepatitis B. " Alternatively, one participant noted that increased knowledge would prevent discrimination within the workforce: "if people knew [and] employers knew it needs blood contact to get hepatitis, they would not discriminate against people …but they say it is contagious, that it is airborne and it so …infectious so that's why they discriminated against people even in jobs. " The impact of the lack of awareness about hepatitis B had a significant impact on the development of community based responses to the infection with one informant describing the fundraising challenges result from lack of community awareness and the unvirtuous cycle this produces: "We have been trying as an organization to do (raise) awareness, but you as you might be aware, most of our funding is donor driven, and we don't have so many donors for hepatitis. "

Misinformation
Overall participants overwhelmingly described how the significant level of misinformation specific to hepatitis B transmission, vaccination, and treatment was a primary cause of discrimination. Several participants noted the impact of misinformation in relation to transmission and vaccination: Within healthcare schools (i.e. medical school, nursing school), limits on education for people with hepatitis B were described. One participant shared, "I received a[n] email that a girl got a rejection in medical college just because she was a hepatitis B positive. ", while another described, "I've heard students who had to meet with their [advisor], they were told they couldn't rotate through certain rotations like surgery. " In the Philippines, one participant reported, "We had a student who is a I think she was studying as a nurse, she was forced to drop out and transfer to another curriculum. " Another participant described how, "two students lost their medical acceptances just a couple weeks before matriculating: when they submitted their health forms and the letters written by the schools were just so mean they said, you are a threat to you yourself and others and you can't matriculate. "

Employment based discrimination
Employment based discrimination affecting people with hepatitis B was reported as occurring by all participants except those from Mongolia. Interviewees explained that people with hepatitis B were denied access to employment as a result of their hepatitis B status. One key stakeholder from India reported, "In India, every day we hear about the denied employment, just because of the hepatitis B positive. " Some participants also reported employers conducting random and unnecessary workplace-based hepatitis B screening. In Ghana for example, an interviewee explained, "I know about three guys that wrote me they work in a bank, and they did this random testing, and they were positive, and the result came out and the banks told them, they don't need their services anymore. Because of their hepatitis B status. " One informant from the Philippines noted consequences of pre-employment screening for hepatitis B. Key informants noted that in order to gain employment in many jobs, whether government or military, and even within some private industries screening for hepatitis B can take place and if someone tests positive for hepatitis B, they are denied employment despite their qualifications. This means that any regulation or law affecting employees cannot be used for redress. One individual described, "Most of the cases is pre-employment. When it comes to pre-employment, since you're not still technically an employee it's very hard to complain. I mean you can go to the Department of Labor and complain, but some would say that because you're not an employee, management has the prerogative to decide whether to accept you, so you don't really have a choice. " The settings in which employment-based testing was broad with one participant noting restrictions occurring within the hospitality industry, "When it comes to food-like company, producing food, hotel job, … people doing anything food … before you can get employment, you go for medical checkup. After medical checkup, if you are qualified, they will just call you… if you have any hepatitis B, they will disqualify. " Other forms of employment-based discrimination come from policing or military services in many countries with informants from Africa particularly, although not exclusively, noting this issue. A participant reported from Ghana, "recruitment into the military when they do that test and they are positive, they will discriminate against them they don't get employed because of they are hep B positive. Another participant shared their experience in Uganda, "In the Uganda police force and Uganda people defense forces… when they are advertised for recruitment before you go for the training, they subject you to the tests. So, once they get you with hepatitis B that is enough to kick you out. " Similar instances were described within Nigeria, "Within Nigeria, we have people that are Another participant from Ghana talked of the challenges associated with religiously-mandated pre-marital screening, and the impact of this testing on people with hepatitis B within this context, "Mostly just because this is organized by religious organizations for intending couples to get the screenings. And then, some of them [organizations] lack this knowledge to know that if one partner is positive, then the other could be vaccinated so for some as soon as the one partner is positive, it becomes like an end to the relationship. "

Recommendations
Participants were asked to recommend what needed to occur to address hepatitis B related discrimination. A variety of suggestions were made including the development of comprehensive public education to address hepatitis B misinformation and lack of knowledge within the community, and among health care workers. Others reported the need for the systematic documentation of discrimination, and support for people living with and affected by hepatitis B with one participant noting, "If we have more data to showcase and tell the world what is happening, I believe that will go a long way. " To improve awareness a participant shared, "For the patient you need a lot of support some of these community driven activities to drive to increase awareness, to get people tested. And then that will probably make change happen." Most informants noted the importance of national policies to protect individuals living with hepatitis B from discrimination with one noting, "First of all, we need a national policy. " Another informant noted the experience of government response to the HIV epidemic and its success in developing systematic responses limiting testing, "Policy, what we need is really like HIV, they have a very specific policy that pertains to testing, so the employer cannot force you to take a test like that, so what we want is similar to HIV. " Another participant described the importance of partnership between government and people living with hepatitis B to effectively develop policy against discriminatory practices and explained, "When we are proposing those policy changes, how would you expect their policies to change if you're not involving the people who are watching on the ground in the community. "

Discussion
While hepatitis B is a chronic manageable health condition, our data demonstrate that hepatitis B discrimination has a significant impact on the lives of those affected. Discrimination can occur in a cyclic nature at various points in an individual's life from education, to seeking employment, to marriage, to restrictions on entry, travel and stay in other countries. Hepatitis B discrimination impacts mental and physical health of those experiencing it firsthand and limits overall wellbeing, quality of life, can lead to poor health outcomes and avoidance of testing and management. Within the context of HIV, and where discrimination related to HIV is well documented and has been for several years, hepatitis B related discrimination is occurring in health care settings, reducing access to health services or engaging in quality health care [19], and findings from this study demonstrate a parallel between the experience of HIV and hepatitis B within health care as key informants describe discrimination contributing to limiting access to health care services for clinical management, including diagnosis. Future research should continue to explore and document the impact of discrimination within the context of health care services and specifically hepatitis B.
Findings from this study illustrate sources of discrimination as a combination of lack of information, misinformation, and poor hepatitis B knowledge, which is consistent with previous research. Literature documents low knowledge related to transmission as a key contributor of discrimination within China specifically [9]. Within this study, key informants describe the limited understanding of hepatitis B transmission and prevention within populations specifically leading to stigma and discrimination [20][21][22]. Hepatitis B is primarily transmitted in countries with rigorous vaccination programs through unprotected sex or unsafe injecting and is understood and described within health systems as a sexually transmitted infection [23][24][25]. This framing can lead to further discrimination and stigma which was described by key informants as a significant challenge.
Our study identified many consequences of discrimination and the clear lack of knowledge associated with hepatitis B. An identified downstream impact is the promotion of false cures and treatments sought by people living with hepatitis B in many countries. Similar findings have been identified within literature, with a commentary on discrimination in China highlighting the impact of advertising of alleged cures and remedies that contribute to the deep antipathy towards people living with hepatitis B [9]. While many studies have demonstrated a clear gap in knowledge related to hepatitis B [7], efforts at every level should continue to work towards increasing knowledge and awareness of hepatitis B transmission, prevention, and diagnosis working to normalize conversation around hepatitis B to work towards reducing stigma and discrimination.
Within interviews, herbalists or traditional medicine was reported in several countries including Nigeria, Uganda, Ghana, and China and works to convince people living with hepatitis B that they can falsely be cured and remove the cause of their discrimination. Interviewees reported that in desperation, people living with hepatitis B are determined to try any means to remove the virus from their body. Key informants described that herbal or traditional medicine can provide a "promised solution" to remove hepatitis B, reduce their financial costs, provide access to a medication, and remove the thing that is causing their discrimination. That individuals are seeking false cures and traditional medicine highlights the lack of information and knowledge associated with the disease among those directly impacted by it. Additionally, the possible impact of herbal and traditional medicines in the context of hepatitis B discrimination needs further exploration.
Overall, hepatitis B discrimination was reported to affect health outcomes, mental health, contribute to economic and family instability, social isolation, suicide, loss of employment, and trauma. The impact of discrimination directly affects not only the individual but their families and relationships as seen with the described pre-marital testing in this study. It is important to further explore the context of pre-marital testing as authors anticipate it taking place in more than the countries explored within this study and of the consequences of this testing on people diagnosed with hepatitis B.
The educational and employment discrimination that people with hepatitis B face directly affects their economic contributions to their families and future opportunities. Unfortunately, in many reported instances, employment discrimination occurs through pre-employment or pre-admission screening when individuals have no authority to appeal or protest limiting their options and forcing individuals to accept what the employer or institution decides. Further, key informants describe many individuals in sub-Saharan Africa and the Western Pacific seek employment opportunities as domestic workers in the Middle East and parts of Asia. As people seek these opportunities, they are screened for hepatitis B and denied employment opportunities if positive hepatitis B test occurs. Denial of employment or education as a result of hepatitis B infection is unethical, and contradicts World Health Organization hepatitis B guidance [26]. There is no reason that people with hepatitis B should not be provided with the equal opportunities for employment, travel, and education and anything otherwise considered a human rights violation. As noted previously, most literature describing hepatitis B related stigma and discrimination comes from China or is related to people with Chinese ethnicity. Given the increasing global role of China and its economic support of many developing countries in Africa, Asia and the Pacific Islands, the social marginalization resulting from hepatitis B infection is being carried over with this support. It is normal in China for people with hepatitis B to be socially marginalized, with these norms affecting African students, and one participant from Africa noted "For African nations to send young people to universities to study in China now part of that practice is screening them for HIV, syphilis and all major infectious diseases including hepatitis B and C. Those who are found to be positive, are essentially deported. " The same scenario commonly was reported to occur for health professionals across all countries with the denial of  [10,14]. Even with protections and policy in place, refusal of admission within nursing and medical schools still is reported to occur [14].
There is a need to systematically document discrimination at local, country, regional and global levels and which should include the location, the causes of discrimination, where and how it is occurring at a local level. This documentation could be used to inform policy that ensures people with hepatitis B are provided protection and equal opportunity for employment, education, travel and immigration.
In some countries policies are in place to protect against discrimination specific to employment and individuals living with hepatitis B. In the United States, for example, individuals with hepatitis B fall under protections with the Americans with Disabilities Act and therefore have protections in place legally against discrimination [14]. This is not the case with militaries however, and even in the United States Military service, people living with hepatitis B are barred from deployment and have their careers put at risk due to infection. Within most countries, no transparent policies exist regarding hepatitis B despite reported discrimination occurring. In contrast to hepatitis B, most countries have policies in place against HIV discrimination, however, there is a need to make this policy broader and include diseases like hepatitis B to ensure discrimination is not tolerated. Additionally, the Global Health Sector Strategy on Viral Hepatitis emphasizes the need to address stigma and discrimination, but it is not written into the action plans of many countries. Future efforts should ensure that each country with elimination strategies include hepatitis B discrimination protections and policies.
In addition to implementing policy to prevent discrimination, there should be redress for individuals to address and report the discrimination that they experience. In China it has been documented despite a robust anti-discrimination policy, the discrimination is still widely occurring largely due to lack of knowledge of the existing policy at the local level [9]. Efforts should be made to ensure antidiscrimination policies trickle down to local and employer levels to ensure robust implementation.
Of the few published studies on hepatitis B discrimination within China, all recommended comprehensive informational campaigns to improve awareness regarding modes of hepatitis B transmission,and prevention through vaccination [9,10]. The recommendations provided by our key informants is in line with the need for improved awareness in the general population.
Finally, those that have personal experiences related to discrimination should be at the forefront of the discussion and provided opportunities to share their lived experiences of how discrimination has directly impacted their lives and livelihood. To effectively address discrimination and stigma occurring related to hepatitis B those individuals who have firsthand knowledge of its consequences should be part of the solutions. Overall, discrimination specific to hepatitis B plays a considerable role in the lives of those directly affected and can occur at various points in an individual's life. There is a need for more research, advocacy, and policy at all levels to effectively address discrimination, bring awareness to this issue, and work towards reducing its unjust consequences for those living with hepatitis B globally.

Limitations
While this study provides valuable insight into hepatitis B discrimination and the consequences of that discrimination, there are important limitations that should be noted. First, while qualitative data collection methods provide rich, in-depth, experiential data, the data are limited in external validity (generalizability) and not representative of all experiences related to discrimination. While much of the sample identified as living with hepatitis B and had spent extensive time working in hepatitis B sectors, the sample size was small, only represented a small number of countries where hepatitis B is endemic, and future work should be done to gather and document additional data on hepatitis B discrimination globally. While issues of discrimination were noted by all informants, this is not to imply that hepatitis B related discrimination is an issue in all countries. Additionally, all interviews were conducted in English, limiting the global representativeness of the sample itself.

Conclusion
Findings from our analysis demonstrate that hepatitis B discrimination has a significant impact on the lives of those infected. Discrimination can occur in a cyclic nature at various points in life from education, to seeking employment, to marriage, to restrictions on immigration entry, travel and stay in other countries. Hepatitis B discrimination has a substantial impact and affects an individual's mental and physical health and limits overall wellbeing, quality of life, can lead to poor health outcomes and avoidance of testing and management. Future research should continue to examine the consequences of hepatitis B discrimination using systematic documentation of it happening on the ground at local, country, regional and global levels. Ultimately, policy change is needed to ensure people with hepatitis B are provided protection and equal opportunity for employment, education, travel, and immigration. CF, project lead on the questionnaire development, data collection and analysis and initial draft and interpretation of the study results. LM, assisted in the development of the questionnaire, conducting interviews, transcription, and analysis of study. CF and LM both completed training in qualitative data collection techniques, including completion of graduate level courses. VC, assisted in transcription and analysis of the study as well as review of the manuscript. JW, assisted in the conceptualization, analysis, identification of key informants, editing and review of the manuscript. CC, assisted in the conceptualization, analysis, and identification of key informants, editing and review of the manuscript. The author(s) read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding
No funding was granted for the research conducted or the publication of this manuscript.

Availability of data and materials
Transcripts related to this study are available to corresponding author upon a reasonable request. Transcripts will not include any identifiable information if data is requested.

Declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate This study was approved by the Heartland Institutional Review Board with verbal consent obtained and recorded by all study participants prior to each interview. This study was performed in accordance with the ethical standards as laid down in the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki and its later amendments and comparable ethical standards.

Consent for publication
Not applicable. Overcoming Discrimination Use when individual describes current methods of overcoming stigma or discrimination or suggests strategies to overcome discrimination or stigma associated with hepatitis B

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Pre-marital testing Use when the individual describes getting tested for hepatitis as part of the process before marriage 5 16 Reason for Discrimination Use when the individual describes their experience or understanding related to why individuals are being discriminated against (Examples (from interviews so far) include lack of knowledge related to hepatitis B prevention and transmission)

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Stigma Use when the person describes or mentions being treated differently due to their hepatitis B status 13